My first question is: Is this problem primarily a function of the
change of prescription (my eyes) or more of the nature of the Shamir
lens relative to this frame's vertical? The Shamir requires a minimum
19mm fit, mine being fit at 19.5mm. Would I have been better off with
something requiring a shorter fit? When I initially mentioned the
Autograph IIs, the shop suggested the Zeiss individual, which requires
an 18mm minimum (they had done Autographs, but this was their first
pair of IIs, and it required using a different lab than they normally
use and prefer). Thanks.
Rx (for Comforts):
OD +0.25 -0.75 100 +2.00
OS +0.50 -1.50 90 +2.00
Current Rx (for Autograph II):
OD +0.25 -0.75 90 +2.25
OS +0.50 -1.00 100 +2.25
* The main reason for the follow up eye exam was that the original
prescription set up a reading distance of a foot, really 9", which
this shop considers normal. They do not recognize how close a foot
actually is, and how relatively unusual it is for anyone short of
thick lenses to hold material that close.
-- Chuck Knight
P.S. Why did you change lens type? From your description, it sounds
like the Varilux worked well for you.
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On Dec 25, 5:23 pm, highstream <geneg...@peoplepc.com> wrote:
> While there are things
> much to like about these lenses, there is one overriding problem. The
> area that falls in 'mid distance' is blurry. That's from about 20"
> out to about at least 5 feet, getting worse as it goes out. That
> includes practical vision areas like the computer screen (33-36") and
> viewing titles in the library stacks. Just the sort of 'gap' that
> creates an everyday problem.
We have a very similar problem. If I want to see anything clearly from
about 18" to about 4 feet away, best thing is to remove my glasses.
Yes, I can tilt my head and find a very narrow sweet spot where things
are relatively sharp but it's like looking through a gun slit window
on an armored vehicle.
> My first question is: Is this problem primarily a function of the
> change of prescription (my eyes) or more of the nature of the Shamir
> lens relative to this frame's vertical?
I'm going to guess the Shamir lenses are the culprit. Your
prescription hasn't changed at all for distance and just a tad for
reading.
After 10 years with Comforts, inclduing four years with this last
pair, I figured with a change of frames it was worth a look at the
alternatives was worth it, especially since lens design quality has
improved so much over the years (i.e., not just marketing). Reading
through a pro's forum, the phrase "best I've ever used" kept coming up
for the Autograph IIs, which is what took me in that direction, for
better and worse. I can still return the Shamir pair and, after Jan
1, the optician can probably get a coupon for the Zeiss individual.
The question is, would that make any difference in terms of mid
distance viewing (without introducing other problems)?